SEO Ranking Factors In 2009

June 2, 2009
By Lisa Barone in Internet Marketing Conferences

….and we’re back from lunch. If you haven’t chimed in on the “is nofollow dead” drama going on, get to it. We’ll wait.

Okay, actually we won’t wait. But you can read it later. Danny Sullivan is moderating the likes of Rand Fishkin, Laura Lippay and Marty Weintraub. This should be all kinds of interesting. I almost feel bad for Laura. She’s paired with some crazed, loud mouth boys. Kidding! :)

Oh, Danny Sullivan is trying to overtake my laptop.   He has a message for you…

[Lisa is the most awesome live blogger. I have taken over her computer to say this. But she told me I had to say it. No, not really. It’s true. But now i have to go on stage to run the session. Bye, –danny]

Thanks, Danny!  Can we get to the liveblogging now? Stellar!

Rand Fishkin is up first.  He lets us know about the ranking study SEOmoz recently conducted where they matched real data with expert opinion on tons of different ranking factors.

One thing they looked at was what was the most important on page feature. According to the data, the most important on page factors are – URL, Title, and Alt text. An image with alt text on the page seems to have a high correlation for high rankings. Correlation is NOT causation. Just because you have great alt text doesn’t mean that’s why you’re ranking, however, many people who rank very well TEND TO have good alt text. I think that’s an important clarification by Rand. Nicely done, sir.

Importance of keyword usage in various parts of the title tag:  Should you put your brand first? They do on SEOmoz, but if you’re basing it solely on SEO, the research says it’s not the best way to go.  There is a high correlation with ranking well and having the keyword that you’re targeting as the very first words of the title tag.

Substantive Disagreement

  • H1 Tags (low correlation with rankings)
  • Alt Text (higher correlation with rankings)
  • Keyword in URL (very high correlation)
  • Keyword Location (data says closer is much better)

They asked folks about things related to the page or domain (not links or keywords). Things like the recency of page creation, historical content changes, use of advertising on the page, use of Google Adsense, Meta description, etc.   Existence of substantive, unique content on the page was viewed as most important. So were use of links on the page that point to other URLs on this domain.

Google and Yahoo are more trust-focused, while Microsoft is more individual page focused.

[Rand is offering a lot of really great information and I’m not doing it justice trying to blog his charts and graphs (you try putting pie graphs into words!). With any luck, Rand will post his presentation over on SEOmoz later.]

The importance of SEO metrics in Google Search

  • Domains linking to URL
  • Google.com links
  • Yahoo! SE External Links
  • Google.com Toolbar Page Rank

Subdomains vs root domains

Most people feel that content on subdomains inherent some, but not all, of the query-independent ranking metrics of the root domain and is judged partially as a separate entity.   And the data gathered by SEOmoz shows basically the same thing.

High level view of Google’s algorithm

  • Trust authority of host domain – 25 percent
  • Link population of specific page – 22 percent
  • Anchor text of external links – 20 percent
  • On page keyword use – 15 percent
  • Traffic and CTR data – 7 percent
  • Social graph metrics – 6 percent
  • Hosting and registration – 5 percent

Future of Google’s Algorithm: They think links will continue to be a major part of Google’s algorithm. Forty-seven percent say they’ll decline in importance but still be important.

Next up is Marty Weintraub. I have a feeling this isn’t going to be pretty.

It used to be easy to find out the ranking factors back in 1996. The good old days of spamming the bejesus out of search engines is over. It was like stealing back then. “State of the art” is still crude. The public understanding of search rankings is strong to weak on semantic and power nodes.  Especially on the enterprise level. Hot shots do it all by hand to mid tail.  But with cool APIs,  it won’t be crude for long.

Fact: You can’t rank for [Las Vegas hotels] with a new blogspot blog.  You can’t pick head terms by search frequency. But that’s how it was done when things were crude and people are still trying to do it.

With the massive competitiveness of the Internet, you have to factor for attainability. The search engines have bullshit detectors. Pretty words don’t matter. Nor does attainability if nobody cares. Attainability doesn’t mean anything without frequency and frequency is useless with attainability. Deep.

Marty says that PageRank is pixel green already-obsolete fairy dust — and yet it bothers him when it rolls down. Hee. You would think Google would let us buy better.

Dawn of Transparent Next Gen Tools

The public seeks congruencies with SERPs. Fledgling metrics have emerged to remove our blinders. We need to deconstuct the real linking universe and not fully depend on the search engines. Enter LinkScape, SEOmoz’s brazen flagship. It’s the anti-black box for SEOs. It reveals metrics that the search engines won’t tell us. According to Rand, it’s catching up to Yahoo in girth. Marty says that Google must hate LinkScape. :)

The mainstream monopoly on comprehensive enterprise crawl and analyze is over. Black box is not the new black. Build a spreadsheet of metrics where you hypothesize and show correlation of pages to Google SERPs.

  1. East semantic evaluation, multiple sources.
  2. Linkscape, Internal/External page & site scrapes, Yahoo Site explorer (quality of internal anchor text, page trust, page juice, topic relevance of inbound links)
  3. Magestic SEO, WayBack Machine, WhoIs, Alexa, Hitwise

Pulling spreadsheets is a far cry from being programmatic. Understanding page strengths and SERP competitiveness in charts takes HOURS. Define, wire up by API, etc.

Laura Lippay is up.

If search engine optimization was primarily only about inlinks & browser titles, what’s stopping her mom from creating a motorcycle site with great affiliates that outrank Yahoo Autos? Successful search engine optimization is meta tag optimization, affiliate networks, inlinks, keyword density, etc. But it’s ALSO about being viral, having buzz, getting link, and being your own linkbait.

What is that top ranking factor? A good product.

At Yahoo they use Rand’s SEO Ranking Factors, but there’s one small modification. The best ranking factor is having a great product.

To prove her point, Laura asks if her mom had to choose one of these knitting sites, which one should she choose?

  • Knitting World: Yarn articles, knitting news, knitting stories
  • Knitting life: Yarn articles, knitting news, knitting stores, PLUS you can upload videos, there’s local information, you can upload photos, and there’s a whole community behind the site.

If you were a search engine, you’d rank the same site her mother would choose. Because that’s the better site. The best ranking factor you can have is a great product. Make the product manager and anyone involved in strategy your best friend. Before building SEO into a product, ask yourself:

  1. What will it take to be a category-killer?
  2. Exactly what do I need to build into my product to outrank my competitors?

Excellent advice.

Internet Marketing Conferences
Internet Marketing Conferences

The Spam Police

on Mar 10 by Lisa Barone

Hey, hey, it’s time to talk about spam!  Maybe we’ll even break out the Kevlar vests and get into the…

Internet Marketing Conferences
Internet Marketing Conferences

BlogWorld Expo Recap: Day 3

on Oct 17 by Lisa Barone

Ah, the third annual BlogWorld Expo has come to a close. And it’s sad. However, there were some stellar sessions…

Internet Marketing Conferences
Internet Marketing Conferences

Keynote Conversation with Eli Pariser

on Sep 14 by Lisa Barone

GOOD MORNING, SMXers (and non-SMXers, as well)! Are you AWAKE? Did you have a fantastic night last night? We certainly…

^Back to Top